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Do you want to quickly find your boot log, or ever wanted to know which version of bootloader is installed on your disk(s), had the need to dump your BIOS from OS X, just curious about your own system setup or been asked to provide your setup information to others when asking for assistance?

DarwinDumper is a useful collection of readily available tools, and scripts wrapped in an application framework giving you a convenient method to quickly gather a system overview of your hack or Mac. And rest assured that enabling the privacy option will mask sensitive data like the IOPlatformSerialNumber, IOPlatformUUID, IOMACAddress(s), USB Serial Number(s), SystemSerialNumber, serial-number, fmm-mobileme-token-FMM, MLB and ROM efi vars and CustomUUID in the dumped files and report.

Latest beta is 3.1.0b8
Current Release Version: 3.0.4.

The system dumps are saved to a folder or your choice, but defaulting to the same directory as the main application. You can choose to setup a symlink to make it simple to run DarwinDumper from the Terminal.

There is an option to create an html report showing a complete overview of the dumps. This report will mostly just contain the text dumps as you'll find in the main dump directory, but for some dumps there is extra processing to try to present the information in a better way. For example, the Disk Partitions and Unique ID's dump will show a visual map of the disk layout, and the DMI Tables (SMBIOS) dump will show the data split by table type.

Note: The html report does not contain all files from a complete dump so if seeking assistance for a problem and you wish to send someone a DarwinDump then you will want to send the complete dump directory and not just the .html report file.

Running DarwinDumper from the command line:
From Terminal, you can initiate DarwinDumper by running the following script directly.

/DarwinDumper.app/Contents/Resources/public/bash/script.sh
To help with this, the UI has a Symlink option which you can click to create a symbolic link which points to the above script. DarwinDumper can then be subsequently run from the command-line by loading a new Terminal window and typing darwindumper followed by return.

DarwinDumper was originally inspired as an open project by Trauma, it has remained an open project and please keep it an open project, so if you make any changes or additions to it then please share your work here.

Please report any feedback, requests or bugs.

Please note:
DarwinDumper v3 requires OS X 10.9 and newer to run in the Finder, though it should work from the command line okay on older OS versions.

The following link retains the download for v2.9.9.2 for older OS versions.

Hello, so I have this problem with my laptop (asus x540s) I searched the whole internet for guides about installacion MacOS High Sierra on Pentium CPUs and only what I found was nonfunctioning method for me (Shi*** App). So now only what I have is folder with FakeSMC, Nullpowermanagement and FakePCIID kexts - must have kexts for Pentium CPUs. And now I don't know what to do to get working Pentium+Nvida Hackintosh (BTW I have iMac 27 2017 running MacOS Catalina with Install MacOS High Sierra in application folder)
Specs ---
Intel pentium n3700 (Vt-x supported and enabled)
Nvidia GeForce 810m
4gb ram (ddr3)
Also my bios is UEFI, and has almost no settings to set (only secure boot - I turned it off)
And also this laptop is now running Windows 10 and ZorinOS Lite 15 (linux)

Catalina 10.15.4 - Windows 10
What is working:
BCM94360HMB Wifi and Bluetooth
AirDrop, Handoff, FaceTime, Messages, App Store, iCloud, etc.
Intel HD 530 (QE/CI tested, but now I'm using it in headless)
Sleep
RX 5700 (QE/CI with 2 1080p monitors connected)
Sound (all ports)
USB Ports
Two Ethernet ports
macOS with a light OC (4.12 GHz - 4.5 Ghz, XMP, ASUS optimal) No problem so far
ASUS HyperKit with a KINGSTON NVMe SSD - 250 GB
Hardware decoding/encoding on both HD 530 and RX 5700
iGPU QuickSync is used in the default config.plist
To use dGPU for hw decode/encode you need to disable iGPU in BIOS and boot with "config_dgpu_enc_dec.plist" (this will use iMacPro1,1 SMBIOS, so you may need to resign in to use your iCloud)
System Integrity Protection is Enabled by default. If you need to boot with SIP disabled you may use "config_debug.plist" or disable it manually in Clover settings. If you want Enabled SIP but with allowing unsigned kexts you may boot with "CsrActiveConfig = 0x01"
What is not working:
-

Catalina & Windows 10 Dual-Boot (clean install, on one drive):
Boot into your Mac installer, Create 2 partitions in GUID table (1 for Win (I used FAT32 but I think it doesn't matter what you choose), 1 for Mac)
Install Mac, boot with your USB, mount your EFI partition (use terminal or an EFI mounter app), create an EFI folder (if there is no folder), copy the CLOVER folder I attached to the EFI folder, restart
Boot into your Win installer, Format the partition you created for Win, install.
Now, it's automatically booting into Windows. To use Clover open cmd in administrator, type:
bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path \EFI\CLOVER\CLOVERX64.efi
You're done! It will booting into Clover when you start the system, and you can select Win or Mac (or another OS if installed on a 3rd partition).